Quotation from: General Science

Written by: Bertha M. Clark


48. What Becomes of the Carbon Dioxide. When we reflect that carbon
dioxide is constantly being supplied to the atmosphere and that it is
injurious to health, the question naturally arises as to how the air
remains free enough of the gas to support life. This is largely
because carbon dioxide is an essential food of plants. Through their
leaves plants absorb it from the atmosphere, and by a wonderful
process break it up into its component parts, oxygen and carbon. They
reject the oxygen, which passes back to the air, but they retain the
carbon, which becomes a part of the plant structure. Plants thus serve
to keep the atmosphere free from an excess of carbon dioxide and, in
addition, furnish oxygen to the atmosphere.

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